The city of Edinburgh council has been urged to accelerate plans to embrace green technology after it was revealed the number of electric vehicles in the authority’s fleet has remained static over the past few years.

As of August 2018, the council had only 25 electric vehicles, making up just 3 percent of its overall fleet.

Four more electric vehicles are set to replace diesel vehicles in coming months. In 2015, the council had 27 electric vehicles on its books, indicating a slight reduction.

Green transport spokesperson Cllr Chas Booth said: “It’s clear that the council is making some progress in upgrading its vehicles to meet modern cleaner standards.

“However, it’s also clear that progress on electric vehicles is much more modest, with numbers actually dropping slightly in recent years.

“There have been criticisms recently that Edinburgh is way behind other cities like Dundee in providing electric vehicle charging points.

“With so few of its own electric vehicles, maybe that explains why. So the city needs to do a lot more to embrace the electric vehicle transformation.

“The council should be leading from the front on electric vehicles.”

Earlier this year, the council imposed strict European emissions on taxi drivers, forcing them to meet Euro 5 or Euro 6 standards. But around 26 per cent of the council’s vehicles – some 235 vehicles – do not meet these rules.

The city council’s low emissions policy states no taxi or private hire car will be acceptable unless it meets Euro 5 or 6 standards. Vehicles more than a decade old are also set to be refused a licence.

Conservative transport spokesman, Cllr Nick Cook, said: “Despite claims to the contrary, Edinburgh Council has thus far produced little more than hot air when it comes to support for electric vehicles.

“While another report is due next month to the transport and environment committee, the council has yet to even deliver the Marchmont electric vehicle charging pilot it promised my constituents years ago.

“The fact the council is willing to impose strict emissions on taxi drivers, while not meeting said targets themselves, again shows an SNP-Labour council administration out of touch with the hard-working people of Edinburgh.”